He salvaged the majority of the two least-ruptured specimens, and carried them back to the car with him. "As I understand it," he said as he approached. "They either whack 'em real hard with a hammer, or they use these specialized little knives or saws. Probably a vibroknife would do," he said, figuring the most common powered knife, the kind that shook the lightly-serrated blade thousands of times a second, ought to handle even a tough rind in short order.
Coming around the edge of the vehicle he shrugged. "I read that it's worth the effort. Let's see..." He put the two melons down and smoothly drew a
balisong, flipping it open in three swift little flips, and sliced off a dewy fragment of the orange meat. Sampling it, his eyes widened and he nodded. "Definitely worth it. Not unlike sweet-seasoned watermelon, I'd say. But more substantial, and I bet that hint of orangey flavor means it's full of vitamins. Maybe you have a more refined palate..." He offered her the knife to cut her own piece for a sample.
While she was trying that out, he decided to unlimber the sniper rifle after all. He hadn't had occasion to put it through its paces in a good long while, so a little check was warranted. He swiftly snapped it together, building an ever-longer whole out of a variety of separate pieces. While the assembled gun ran through its diagnostics, he murmured, "You fire a sniper rifle like any other weapon: point and shoot. It's just the size of it and the range of it means it has certain advantages and requirements."
When the telltales came back green, he flipped down the two bipod legs near the muzzle. "These are to help support the weight of the gun while you're aiming. The more you can rest the gun on something stable, the more accurate your shot can be, and long-distance sniper shots are all about the accuracy." He flipped up the lens covers on the sight and gave it a check. Without his HALO, he was limited to merely the computerized optics, but that was quite good enough. He leaned forward and half-lay across the bonnet of the car, resting the bipod on the far edge. He nestled the stock of the rifle against his shoulder and looked easily down the scope. "All right, pay attention to how I'm using this. Most of the time, snipers lay up in position for a long time, waiting for a good shot or waiting until they're needed, so they usually find a posture and position where they can stay for long stretches. You want to make sure the butt of the rifle is strong against your shoulder; you leave some gap, and if it kicks back when you fire, the impact could bruise or break you, so that's a general safety tip for all rifles."
"Okay, the sound isn't deafening, but it's a bit more hearty than your average pistol. In the old days, when they first invented these things, I'd be wanting you to wear headphones to protect your hearing, but these days, they got that covered." He sighted on the stem of one of the turtlemelons, seeing it huge in his lens, and squeezed off a round, severing it. He then readjusted to examine the wall of the far side of the valley, a few hundred meters further away, and found a scrub bush on the tip of an outcropping that would do sufficiently. He clipped a couple of its branches with two more shots.
"Okay," he said, rising up. "Everything checks out." He clicked the magnification on the scope down to minimal, which would still make a turtlemelon seem like it was within arm's reach, and then gestured to the weapon, which was approaching being as long as Ilena was tall. "Why don't you reach out and touch someone?"